with Bob Condly
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persecution

The Power of Suggestion

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People don’t like others telling them what to do; they prefer figuring things out for themselves.

Although it was many years ago, I still remember his comment about this topic. Dr. John Bosman, the leader of SpiritWind International, was a native South African but he’d also pastored a church in America, so he had ministry experience in both countries. He said that Americans don’t like being told what to do. Instead, you as a leader give them a suggestion and then they say, “I’ll think about it.”

That must have been his experience pastoring in the USA!

But it’s true, although it applies to everyone about the significant issues in their lives. We want to process matters and reach our own conclusions.

We see this in our spiritual disciplines, too. We listen to a sermon but we often have our own ideas about the meaning of the Bible.

Preachers can respond in one of two ways. They can get forceful and demand the congregation buy into everything they proclaim. Or else!

The alternative is to cave to people and preach little more than weak opinions. Pastors who adopt this approach give up taking a stand on biblical and spiritual matters. Rather than being decisive, they try to please everyone. They go with the flow, and if the flow moves in a different direction, they do, too.

This issue isn’t limited to preachers. Christians who share the gospel with others do so because they believe it’s true. Jesus the Son of God died on the cross for us. God raised Him from the dead. The Lord calls us to trust in the work of Christ on our behalf so we can find forgiveness and new life in Him. If we go wishy-washy on that, we lose the gospel.

And if we lose the gospel, we lose everything.

But we can experience something less dramatic when we read the Bible. Try the following as an experiment. Pick a chapter in Scripture and get a few friends to commit to reading it, too. Each of you should read it a few times over several days so you have time to reflect on it. Write down what impresses you, what you don’t understand, what touches your heart, etc. 

Then, get together with everyone and share your insights. What did you all learn? What did God teach you? It would be interesting to discover how similar some of your insights are, and how unique others are.

This shouldn’t surprise us, because the Bible isn’t a dead letter. It’s a living Word!

“For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.” – Hebrews 4:12

“For you have been born again, not of perishable seed, but of imperishable, through the living and enduring word of God.” – 1 Peter 1:23

Since God’s Word is alive, it can speak to our souls in dynamic and creative ways.

So with that in mind, I’d like to give you a suggestion about a passage.

I’ve been teaching a Sunday School class on 1 Peter which I’ve called, Excellence in Exile. I chose that title because Peter encourages Christians to stay loyal to Jesus even if their faith in Christ makes them outcasts in their own communities.

Some Bible scholars interpret this letter as an instruction to baptismal candidates. I can see why they’d make that argument. Baptism initiates believers into the life of the church and doing so can alienate them from family and neighbors. Baptism is a blessing, but it’s also a challenge!

Here’s the reference:

“In it [Noah’s ark] only a few people, eight in all, were saved through water, 21and this water symbolizes baptism that now saves you also–not the removal of dirt from the body but the pledge of a clear conscience toward God. It saves you by the resurrection of Jesus Christ, 22who has gone into heaven and is at God’s right hand–with angels, authorities and powers in submission to Him.” – 1 Peter 3:20b-22

The letter mentions baptism in only one verse, so I don’t want to overstate the importance of the sacrament. I can’t say for sure that the whole of 1 Peter orients around baptism, but this passage shows the apostle respects its significance.

When I read the next section of the letter, 4:1-11, I began to wonder about something. I’m not saying that the Bible scholars are right that 1 Peter is all about baptism, but let’s accept the idea that it’s a big deal in this book! With that sacrament in the back of my mind, I began reading the first section of chapter 4 in light of another sacrament, the Lord’s Supper.

Where’d I get that idea?

Well, baptism brings people into the community of faith. Through this ritual, souls identify themselves with the suffering, death, and resurrection of Jesus. They have a new loyalty to a new Authority, and this change can get them in trouble with the world.

Society will try to win them back to “the way things used to be,” when those who are now Christians drank, fooled around, and caused all kinds of trouble.

But if the temptations don’t work, the world gets hostile–and fast. Followers of Jesus find themselves kicked out of families, denied employment, jailed, or worse. 

How are believers supposed to handle these difficulties?

We help each other!

The church is the people of God, the family to which we now belong. Read verses 1-11 in chapter 4 and you’ll see how God wants Christians to care for one another in the context of the trials we face in this world.

And the principal setting to give and receive such aid is the worship liturgy of the church. When we gather in the name of Jesus, we celebrate the Lord and we bless those who are suffering for His name. When we take the elements of Communion, we remember Christ’s passion because many of us are going through something similar. The Lord’s Supper sustains the faithful; it keeps us from surrendering to the pressures we endure.

I realize the passage in chapter 4 doesn’t mention the Eucharist, so I won’t insist this is what Peter meant when he penned his words.

But, I offer you a suggestion. If baptism plays a major role in 1 Peter, we should consider the Lord’s Supper, too.

A suggestion with potential and power for our spiritual lives!

When Scripture and Society Speak

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The Swiss theologian Karl Barth told preachers, “Take your Bible and take your newspaper, and read both. But interpret newspapers from your Bible.”

Today, we’d pour over screens (and coffee!) rather than papers, but the point remains. Reading the Bible helps us understand the good news of Jesus Christ. Reading websites helps us understand, well, the bad news of this world. Sad but true!

When we read both, we discover how relevant God’s Word is for the issues we confront today. The Bible is ancient yet always applies. It has the answers our world needs.

Knowing this, we can deal with Scripture and the newspaper in two ways. One is to use contemporary events as illustrations of biblical principles. For example, Moses warned the Israelites,

“But if you fail to do this, you will be sinning against the LORD; and you may be sure that your sin will find you out.” – Numbers 32:23

The idea that people can’t cover up sin for long is a common one in sermons. And every time a story breaks that exposes a hidden crime, preachers are apt to mention it as evidence of the truth of the Bible.

And that’s correct.

But there’s another way to deal with God’s Word and the news media. It’s a slower approach and it requires some discipline, but it’s fruitful.

Do a verse-by-verse study.

For instance, if you’ve ever read the book of Ecclesiastes, you know it’s not uplifting! Quite negative, it can depress you if you’re not careful!

But it’s in the Word, so God must have had a reason for including it. When we read through it, with diligence and openness, we learn how bitter and unfulfilling life is in a fallen world. Distance from God depresses. That’s the unavoidable truth of the book of Ecclesiastes.

Allow the themes and details of a whole chapter, or an entire book of the Bible, to instruct you. Let these confirm what’s right in your heart and challenge what needs to change.

Don’t force the Bible to fit contemporary ways of thinking, and don’t edit the Word so it fits your preferences. Let the Lord lead you as you travel with Him long-distance. When you go slow with Scripture and let it speak to you, you’ll grow in Christ. You might not notice, but you’ll mature in matters of heaven and earth.

At the moment, it’s impossible not to recognize the turmoil our society is in. We’ve had contagious diseases, political discord, and now war in Europe. Our culture is becoming less tolerant of absolute or transcendent truth, and it’s taking particular aim at Christianity. Each day, it’s a little less safe to be a follower of Jesus. 

This describes the current scene. But it’s also quite old, even ancient. The apostle Peter wrote his first letter to help Christians deal with similar trials. At that time, Christians were starting to feel economic and social pressure in the Roman Empire for their commitment to the Lord Jesus. This would soon include physical persecution, even martyrdom.

So Peter wrote to believers (living in what is now Turkey) to encourage them in every test they’d face. Peter didn’t despair. He ends his letter with a note of victory:

And the God of all grace, who called you to His eternal glory in Christ, after you have suffered a little while, will Himself restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast. 11To Him be the power forever and ever. Amen. 12With the help of Silas, whom I regard as a faithful brother, I have written to you briefly, encouraging you and testifying that this is the true grace of God. Stand fast in it. – 1 Peter 5:10-12

I’m preparing to teach a Sunday School class on 1 Peter. The news of this world is negative, but Christians need more than an isolated verse or two if they’re going to endure.

Going through the entire letter helps us to think about personal and social issues from God’s point of view. It takes time; it’s slow work, but it pays off. In the long run, we mature as disciples of Jesus Christ when we give His Word priority.

The world has many voices; the media ever shouts for our attention. But the quiet voice of the Spirit calls to us. It’s in His Word. Will we listen?

with Bob Condly

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